Militancy Haqqani has admitted planning the 14 January 2008 attack against the Serena Hotel in
Kabul which killed six people, including American citizen Thor David Hesla. Haqqani confessed his organization and direction of the planning of an attempt to assassinate
Hamid Karzai, planned for April 2008. Several reports indicated that Haqqani was targeted in a massive U.S. drone attack on 2 February 2010, but that he was not present in the area affected by the attack. In March 2010, Haqqani was described as one of the leaders on the "
Taliban's Quetta Shura". Sirajuddin Haqqani's deputy,
Sangeen Zadran, was killed by a
US drone strike on 5 September 2013. In June 2011, after the execution of
Zar Ajam by the government of Afghanistan, Haqqani promised to avenge Ajam's death by targeting judges and the courts involved in the case. Ajam, a 17-year-old Pakistani boy from
North Waziristan, had taken part in a terrorist attack in February 2011 against the
New Kabul Bank in
Jalalabad, resulting in the deaths of 40 people. Haqqani was appointed the second
deputy leader of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan by
Leader Akhtar Mansour upon the latter's election on 29 July 2015. He was elevated to the position of first deputy leader when
Hibatullah Akhundzada, who was the first deputy under Mansour, assumed the leadership on 25 May 2016. Jalaluddin Haqqani died in 2018 after a long illness and Sirajuddin became the leader of the Haqqani network, though Jalaluddin may have turned over operational control as early as 2008.
Taliban government since 2021 When the Taliban
retook control of the country in August 2021, the leader of the Islamic Emirate became Afghanistan's ruler and
head of state, and the deputy leader became the country's second-most-powerful position. Haqqani gave his first ever on-camera interview in May 2022, with
Christiane Amanpour in Kabul. Following the interview, he was described by Amanpour as the "heir" to Akhundzada in his capacity as deputy leader and "the most powerful member, frankly, of the current government, and indeed in the Taliban movement" due to Akhundzada's isolation in Kandahar. In the interview, Haqqani acknowledged concern by the international community over the
treatment of women by the Taliban, and claimed women's rights would be respected, despite recent crackdowns, including an abrupt closure of secondary schools for girls and a decree requiring women to wear full-body coverings when in public. He claimed the schools would reopen once dress code issues were resolved, and said the veil decree was only advisory, despite evidence to the contrary. Haqqani also said the Taliban wants good
relations with the United States and the
international community, and no longer sees the U.S. as an enemy. In February 2023, Haqqani issued a rare rebuke of the government's hardline policies, which was widely interpreted as a criticism aimed at Akhundzada, who has governed in an increasingly autocratic and ultraconservative fashion. Speaking at a religious school in
Khost Province, he said: "Monopolizing power and hurting the reputation of the entire system are not to our benefit... more responsibility has been placed on our shoulders and it requires patience and good behavior and engagement with the people." Government spokesman
Zabihullah Mujahid indirectly reacted by saying criticism of the emir should be made in private, without naming Haqqani. In June 2024, Haqqani made his first visit overseas since the takeover, to meet UAE President
Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan in
Abu Dhabi. The US criticized the UAE government for allowing him to visit despite the travel ban imposed by
United Nations Security Council Resolution 1988. In March 2025, the Afghan interior ministry announced the lifting of bounties placed by the United States on Haqqani and his relatives
Abdul Aziz Haqqani and
Yahya Haqqani. On 15 August 2025, Supreme Leader Hibatullah Akhundzada reappointed Haqqani and the rest of the cabinet to their positions on a permanent basis. ==Writings==